Simply Streisand

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Simply Streisand
Simply Streisand cover
Studio album by Barbra Streisand
Released October 1967 (1967-10)
Genre Pop
Length 29:28
Label Columbia
Producer Jack Gold, Howard A. Roberts
Professional reviews
Barbra Streisand chronology
Je m'appelle Barbra
(1966)
Simply Streisand
(1967)
A Christmas Album
(1967)

Simply Streisand (1967) is the ninth studio album released by Barbra Streisand.

The album was released simultaneously with A Christmas Album and was Streisand's first that failed to chart in the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 when it peaked at #12.

Contents

[edit] Track listing

[edit] Side one

  1. "My Funny Valentine" (Lorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers) – 2:22
  2. "The Nearness of You" (Hoagy Carmichael, Ned Washington) – 3:27
  3. "When Sunny Gets Blue" (Marvin Fisher, Jack Segal) – 2:56
  4. "Make the Man Love Me" (Dorothy Fields, Arthur Schwartz) – 2:26
  5. "Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)" (Jimmy Davis, Roger Ramirez, James Sherman)

[edit] Side two

  1. "More Than You Know" (Edward Eliscu, Billy Rose, Vincent Youmans) – 3:29
  2. "I'll Know" (Frank Loesser) – 2:47
  3. "All the Things You Are" (Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern) – 3:36
  4. "The Boy Next Door" (Ralph Blane, Hugh Martin) – 2:50
  5. "Stout-Hearted Men" (Hammerstein, Sigmund Romberg) – 2:43

[edit] Notes

Streisand is said to have also recorded "Willow Weep for Me" during these sessions, but the recording remains unreleased.[1]

This was Streisand's first straight album — meaning songs in English, and without a TV special tie-in — since September 1964, when Columbia Records released People.

The liner notes for the LP were written by the composer Richard Rodgers. "No one is talented enough to sing with the depth of a fine cello or the lift of a climbing bird," he wrote. "Nobody, that is, except Barbra."

"The Nearness of You" was also played during the opening credits of Streisand's 1968 CBS-TV special, A Happening in Central Park.

Stephen Holden of The New York Times later wrote that Simply Streisand was similar to The Third Album (1964), "but it lacked the freshness of its prototype."[2]

[edit] Personnel

[edit] References

  1. ^ Barbra Streisand Music Guide, The. "Simply Streisand" (1967) http://www.bjsmusic.com/simply.html
  2. ^ Holden, Stephen. "The Best of Streisand is in Her Records." The New York Times, 6 Nov. 1977, p. D24.

[edit] External links

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